UTF-
MIME requires that the encoding used to send e-mail is ASCII, so any e-mail that directly uses 8-bit or 16-bit Unicode encodings such as UTF-16 is invalid. Unicode encoded in UTF-7 can be sent in e-mail without using a separate transfer encoding, but still must be explicitly identified as the text character set. In addition, if used within e-mail headers such as "Subject:" UTF-7 must be contained in MIME encoded words identifying the character set. For these and other reasons UTF-7 for use in e-mail has been largely deprecated in favor of UTF-8. A modified form of UTF-7 is currently used in the IMAP e-mail retrieval protocol. DescriptionUTF-7 was first standardized as RFC 1642, A Mail-Safe Transformation Format of Unicode. This RFC has been obsoleted by RFC 2152. Characters below Examples
External links
Categories: Unicode | Character sets |
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